Thinkers Get More Headaches Than Dunces Experts Agree By ALTON L. BLAXESLEE AP Science Writer . NEW YORK CP) Thinkers are more likely to set recurrent head aches than - dunces, some head aches experts agreed here. The aches .don't come from wear and tear or pain or surprise over thinking up thoughts that is. not from the actual process of think ing. Rather they come from what the thinker does. He reads more, uses his eyes more, often works with neck muscles under , strain, said Dr. Francis L. Lederer. otolaryn gologist of the University of Illi nois. r- The thinker has more time to build up all kinds of tensions, less chance to work them out by. exer cise, he said. The non-thinker is usually "too busy with routine work, has no time for headaches." Ware Lengths" Thinkers take in more wave lengths" from events and thoughts around them, have more chance for unconscious anxieties, added Dr. Arnold P. Friedman, director of the headache clinic at lion te- fiora Hospital here. Headaches were discussed by ex perta from seven branches of med icine at a roundtable before the International College of Surgeons. Many Headaches Eight to, 13 million Americans suffer from recurrent headaches. Dr. Friedman estimated.. He says he doesn't feel there is any spe cific personality type marking suf ferers from migraine headaches, often called the worst headaches, or from tension or other forms of headache. , , There are many possible causes of headaches, including " physical health, stress and strain of, life, emotions, the kind of job or mar riage a person has. Dr. Friedman said psychother apy and other treatments had helped but not cured 63 per cent of 2,000 patients coming to Monte fiore with recurrent tension, and migraine headaches. Drugs and other treatments can overcome the pain of acute attacks 75 to 80 per cent of the tune. Purl, Knit Led To Success for NW Woman SAN" FRANCISCO (INS) Most women know how to knit two, purl one, but few make a living out of it much less pro vide employment for 35 workers. Evelyn Robinson of San Fran cisco does just that, and she start ed from worse than nothing she started, in fact, with a knitting mill that was already in receiv ership and an absolute drug on the market , In 1939. successive reverses had brought the Snyder Brothers Knitting Mills into receivership and the bank wanted to get rid of it But each businessman ap proached said: . "What! That white elephant? No, thanks!" Miss Robinson, aa an orphaned youngster from the Pacific North west had come to San Francisco to work and got a job at the mills as a winder. Four years later when she was just 21 she was assistant to the vice president In the four years she had learned to operate knit ting machines, handled finished fabrics' and do some designing, and to have a deep interest in the knitting field. She proposed to the bankers she take over and they greeted her proposal a bit skeptically. But she finally won their consent and a promise of a one-half interest in the business if she could pull it out of the hole. She tackled the seemingly hopeless task, moving to smaller and less expensive quarters, and hiring trusted, handpicked em ployes. She did the work of two people herself, tacluding lighting Unusual Hay Market Opens S ED ALIA, Mo. (AVR. E. Callen discovered an eager- market for his hay the hard way. His truck. piled high with the stuff and en route to another county, cracked an axle and toppled over a few miles north of this Pettis County seat Almost immediately, hay-hungry farmers began converging on the trucker, who escaped injury. Before either the highway patrol or a wrecker arrived, Callen had sold his load. I didn't know Pettis County needs hay so badly," he said. MI had several offers almost before the truck stopped rolling on its side." IKE, AD LAI TO CONFER . CHICAGO Of) President Eisen hower and former Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson of Illinois will meet soon at the White House to assess Ste venson's findings on a tour of the world's capitals. an old-fashioned boiler each mor ning. It was uphill, but five years after she took over, she had paid off every bit of the debt and a half interest was hers. Since then she has purchased the other half interest and the firm is one of the most highly regarded specialty operations in the business. Miss Robinson still puts in a 12 hour day, even though her title is president and does quite a bit of the designing. Many have won first prizes at the California state fair in recent years. She now has an informal fac tory staffed by 34 employes, 30 of them women, and she also finds time for many other activ ities swimming, golfing, garden ing and running her own home. Washington Mirror Group to Aid Financing of Universities , By A. ROBERT SMITH Statesman Correspondent . WASHINGTON As the, na tion's private colleges and uni versities reopen their halls of higher education for another term, a new organization opened for business Tuesday to help them fight the frightening high cost of learning. Called the Council for Finan cial Aid to Education with offices in New York, it is headed by a Pacific North westerner. Dr. Wil son M. Compton, ex-president of Washington State College. The Council was launched Tuesday on a $600,000 three-year budget con tributed by the Ford Founda tion's found for the Advance ment of Education, by the Sloan Foundation and other organiza tions. New Revenue Aim of the council is to open up new pools of revenue to high er educational institutions, espe cially from business and industry. The move comes at a time when independent colleges'and univer sities are seeking means of meet ing their rising costs without in creasing fees and tuition to a point where they foreclose the chances of an education for many good but not well-off students. Dr. Compton calculates the fi nancial income of America's col leges at 90 per cent of their min imum requirements. He estimates they should be receiving $150 million more each year. Clearing House Over a three year period the Council hopes to spell out the needs of the universities and col leges to the business world, and simultaneously indicate to these potential contributors ways in which they can assist education. The Council will not solicit funds for any particular institution, but is to serve as a clearing house be tween donors and receivers. The Council has announced that it will try to show business its stake in the future well-being of higher education -by reminding the business community of the large interest in free institutions which it shares with the universities. This interest in education ' on the part of private industry would be general rather than specific, the Council believes, so that it never seeks to curb the expres sion of unorthodox views which are consistent with the tenets of a free society. The colleges' responsibility, says the Council, will in turn be the assurance that teaching is not in the nature of partisan advoca cy of any special interest and that their researchers handle evidence with integrity. The Council will strive to pro mote goodwill that will be mu tually advantageous to education and business, as well as the na tion at large. Open Friday Nile Til 9 O'Cloclr Slurry! IHIurry! io 387 SEME ST. SUIT PAHTS - STDAT7S - PANAMA & FUR FELT HATS (g(o C3Ko?(cD0GS Off EL 1I0THIHG DESERVED -EIITII1E STOCK TO GO TO OUR ORIGINAL REGULAR LOW PRICES HERTS A ONCE IN A LIFETIME OPPORTUNITY TO STOCK UP ON TOP QUAL ITY CLOTHES AT LESS THAN WHOLESALE COST. NATIONALLY ADVERTISED BRANDS: MONROE. RALEIGH PACESETTER (BOBCRAFT) FASHIONED BY DORMONTE OF HOLLYWOOD. ROYAL PARK AND MANY OTHER MANUFAC TURERS OF BETTER MADE MEN'S FINEST QUALITY IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC 100 WOOL FABRICS. ALL NEW THIS SEASON'S STYLES. HUGE SELECTION OF PATTERNS. COLORS AND WEAVES IN SIZES TO FIT ALL REGULAR. SHORT. LONG AND STOUT. SUITABLE FOR YEAR AROUND WEAR. All Sales Final No Exchanges No R efunds Alterations at Cost No Luyuwuys OPEII FRIDAY IIIGHT TIL 9 0;CL0CK I CLOTHES'. COi 387 STATE ST. Salem's Quality Clothiers far Men and Young Men '2 Doors W t of Liberty St at the- Bus Stop SHOP ink Spacing . Must Be Right XNOXVTLLE, Tenn. (INS) Sink slumping or straining; can make any woman tired before her time, but proper sink spacing means comfort and convenience. Home management - specialists at the University of Tennessee have found that ' the average homemaker. spends more time at her sink than at any kitchen work center. If she has to stoop over a sink that is too low or if she has to strain because her sink it too high, the homemaker becomes tired. It's easy, say the specialists, to discover the correct sink height for the toaividuaL - Stand erect with your arms hanging1 down naturally. If the palms of tout hands rest easily on the sink bottom, then the height of-your sink is right for you. r. ' . . , Many women, particularly short women, will be more comfortable working t a sfok onhr six inches deep,' Instead, of the usual seven to effht Inches. Man festered By Cat Power Machinations OKLAHOMA CITY. (AV-Capt Kenneth T. Goudy, who is station ed at Tinker Air Force Base, wished he had purchased a horse instead of a new car. When he went out to try the new car, it wouldn't start He worked with the starter, pushed all the gadgets, and then decided to investigate under the hood. Someone had stolen his battery. He got another and when he tried to start his car a couple of days later, be heard a terrifying scream. The family cat. Jingle Bells, had been dozing under the hood. Gou dy shooed the cat away, but when he tried to start the car again another m eooooo wwwww. Jingle Bells had returned. Sen. Kennedy, Bride Cut Cake X"'- 7 ? v, u . v ( r V i - ' . i 1 1 " 1 i i " i tin mi Legal NEWPORT, K. L V. 8. Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass.) and his bride the former Jacqueline Lee Bouvier, cat their wedding cake daring reception following their marriage at Newport, R. L (AP Wirephote to The Statesman.) Confident Ex-Marine, Double Amputee Victim of War Action Among New Enrollees at WV ROUND TRIP ENID, Okla. (I) Bus drivers meet the funniest people. A wom an sleepily took an early morning bus to work here, then immedi ately fell 'asleep again and rode twice to the end of the line. Finally the perplexed driver awoke his passenger and asked her to pay the fare. Some 50 veterans of the Ko rean War are on Willamette University campus this fall and among them is a double amputee believed to be the first to enroll at the university. He is William F. Cozad, 23. a big: cheerful ex-Marine staff ser geant of Salem, who is one of three disabled Korean vets on the campus and one of 32 Korean War GI's coming to the university for the first time. Bill, who was married last De cember and is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cozad, 1732 Birchwood Dr., registered Mon day with his fellow classmates and plans to major in economics. He's heading for a business of bis own after graduation. A mortar shell got Bill Aug. 1, 1852, just a few days before the bloody see-saw battles of Bunker Hill. He lost his right arm and nine days later they amputated his right leg. Bill mentioned casually that 70 large pieces of shrapnel were re moved from his body and that be still carries some 300 small pieces. "But they don't bother me much," he added. 1 The ex-Marine Is fitted with artificial limbs. "About the only thing I cant do is run, but I can do everything I want myself," he said confidently. - He and his wife plan to build their own house this spring. Helpful Sea Returns Pair Aboard Ship MONTREAL UFi Two Norwe gian sailors saM here they were washed from a Norwegian freighter by a wave during an Atlantic storm and then deposited safely back on board" by another wave. Lars Sele, 26, and Audun Jense, 22, of the freighter Magnihild, told their story through Capt. Johannes Solhusvik who interpreted for them. "One minute we were in the ocean and the next back on the ship," Sele said. Statesman, Salem, Grew Thursw Sept. 17, 1853 4Sec 2h-3 Jet Aircraft Kills Chickens ALLIANCE. Ohio W) Mrs. James Hawley, s farm woman who lives near here, got pretty mad at U. S. Navy jet plane which made a low pass over her chicken house. . The noise frightened 300 young New Hampshire Reds and 27 of them broke their necks in a jam at the chickenhouse door. When she made a complaint to a sher iff's deputy, he asked -whether she got the plane's number. "It was flying too fast," the indignantly replied. Reporter Can't i Complain of ' MIDLAND, Texas tr Reporter Cope Routh of the Midland Re 1 porter-Telegram couldn't afford to criticize the brand of justice handed down in corporation court A dozen drunks and traffic , offenders were on hand to enter -their pleas when Routh showed : up to cover his beat Judge Edwin T. Stitt was un avoidably detained. Justice of the Peice L. C Stephenson was too busy with his own court to sub stitute. Mayor J. W. McMillan, ex-officio city judge, . wasnt available. Routh was sworn In to read the charges, hear the pleas and assess the fines. Aids Studies Of Historians SANTE FE, N. M. (INS) A legal battle being waged by the Acoma Indians of New Mexico against Uncle Sam will have a marked effect on the labors of historians in the year 2,000. Up to the present time histor ians writing about the tribe have been forced to sit patiently and listen to old tales and folk stories. and watch tribal dances. Worse yet, some have had to take shovel in hand and literally dig up the facta. But the historian in the year 2,000 will be afforded the luxury of reading all about it on micro film, s The tribe's governor, Castillo A. VaDo and his five-man com. mittee are trying to gain over two million acres of land to add to their present 93,000-acre reser vation near Santa Fe. Vallo says that the extra land belongs to the Acomas under old and valid treaties between the Indians and U. S. and the old Spanish conquerors. The documents being preserved on microfilm go back to New Mexico's territorial days, the Spanish occupation and to the year 1230 A. D. Documents from ageless Fran ciscan mission churches also re being filmed to add to Vallo's presentation to the government Typical of the old papers found in the missions was a 1777 mar riage record and an 1819 birth certificate. The entire filming and recording process is being carried on at the University of New Mexico library. Reds Fear Food Shortage in China HONG KONG (fl5) Chinese Communists are buying up every pound of rice they can pry out of farmers in South China at gov ernment prices in efforts to stock pile food against a feared short sge in the autumn. The independent Chinese press here, which usually is fairly ac curate on conditions in nearby Kwangtung province, said Red purchasing agents have been combing the rural areas as fast as crops ripen. Egyptian, 130, Desires j Beautiful Bride of 20 CAIRO W Shehate Ragab says he's 130 years old. He would f like to get married to a "beautiful 1 girl not over 20 years of sge." Ragab says he helped dig the Suez Canal nearly 100 years ago and lived during the reign of Mo hamed Aly, the founder of the late Egyptian dynasty who died in 184a Ragab wistfully recalls that be has been married twice before. FREE ESTIMATES On Floor Coverings NORRIS-WALKER PAINT COMPANY 1710 Front Phone 4-2279 D) Newest, smoothest, least expensive no-shift driving in low-price field Thousands of motorists today arm enjoying thm spectacular performance of Plymouth Hy-Drive -one flowing motion! No noises, jerks or lurches in going from one speed to another. Your car can't up-shift or down-shift on you unexpected h. -""-for a fas for a fast, positive getaway. There's no racing of the engine to get started, no "winding up." ilt u holds your car without using the brakes while halting on a hill. You get good engine braking going downhill. 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